Maybe you’ve dreamt of it: A city made entirely of Jell-O. A bright, quivering, multi-colored sugar-gel landscape. So many adjectives, it merits a slideshow (we’ve so obliged, as you can see).

Visual artist Liz Hickok brought that candyland dream to life, using moulds to form cityscapes out of Jell-O – NYC, Scottsdale, Washington D.C. and, yes, San Francisco. Alex Wain, writer for culture blog So Bad So Good, tipped us off to the edible art display (thank you much, sir), but Hickok has been featured in the New York Times, 7X7 magazine, NPR’s All Things Considered and Talk of the Nation, to name a few spots.

Hickok, who lives in San Francisco and studied fine arts at Oakland’s Mills College, fashions these elaborate jelly-scapes, illuminates them from beneath, then photographs and films it to capture the luminous, ephemeral result. It’s no coincidence that she chose an unstable medium for her three-dimensional rendition of The City’s seismically unsound topography.

“I drew my inspiration for this project from my immediate surroundings – San Francisco, where the geological uncertainties of the landscape evoke uncanny parallels with the gelatinous material,” she writes on her website.